Fewer Pinoys barred from leaving PH due to COVID


The Bureau of Immigration (BI) said it stopped from leaving the country last year close to 12,000 Filipino travelers as a result of the agency’s continued drive against illegal recruitment and human trafficking.

(JANSEN ROMERO / FILE PHOTO / MANILA BULELTIN)

BI Commissioner Jaime Morente said Immigration officers at the different ports of exit deferred the departure of 11,706 passengers, of which 9,411 were stopped at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA).

The number of passengers whose travel were deferred was, however, 70 percent lower than the 38,522 travelers who were barred from leaving in 2019.

“Travel restrictions and international flight suspensions imposed due to the COVID-19 pandemic naturally caused a tremendous drop in the number of Filipinos who traveled abroad in 2020,” Morente said.

He noted that it was only during October that the government started the gradual lifting of travel restrictions, including the ban on non-essential travel by Filipinos.

Nonetheless, Morente stressed it was evident that the pandemic did not stop human traffickers and illegal recruiters from continuing with their nefarious activities and recruiting victims.

“Thanks to our vigilant Immigration officers at the ports, many of these suspected human trafficking victims were rescued before they could leave,” the BI chief said.

BI Intelligence chief Fortunato Manahan Jr., who supervises the BI Travel Control and Enforcement Unit (TCEU), also reported that 295 passengers were turned over to the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) as possible trafficking victims.

Manahan said the most common reasons for preventing a passenger from leaving are failure to present required documents, carrying fraudulent documents, and misrepresentation.